8207
J . Am. Chem. SOC.1988, 110, 8207-8223
Electron-Transfer Activation in the Thermal and Photochemical Osmylations of Aromatic EDA Complexes with Osmium(VII1) Tetroxide J. M. Wallis and J. K. Kochi* Contribution from the Department of Chemistry, University of Houston, University Park, Houston, Texas 77204. Received May 9, 1988
Abstract: Various types of arenes (Ar) spontaneously form with osmium tetroxide a series of highly colored solutions of electron donor-acceptor or EDA complexes such as [Ar,0s04] in nonpolar solvents. Charge-transfer or CT osmylation is simply effected by the actinic irradiation of the absorption bands (huCT),and the molecular structures of the OsO, adducts of benzene (B) and anthracene (A) are elucidated by X-ray crystallography. The metastable ion pair [Ar', Os04-] is established as the seminal intermediate in CT osmylation by time-resolved picosecond spectroscopy attendant upon the specific excitation of the EDA lo9 s-l represents the complex. According to Scheme 11, the rapid collapse of the ion pair (eq 16) with a rate constant k critical transformation in adduct formation. Importantly, this ion-pair mechanism accommodates (a) the osmylation of a wide range of arene donors from the mononuclear benzenes to the electron-rich polycyclic arenes (Table V) under the common umbrella of photoexcitation and (b) the profound effect on the regiochemistry of anthracene (Table VI) by subtle variations in solvent polarity. In the absence of deliberate irradiation (Le,, in the dark), the EDA complexes of Os04with electron-rich arenes, especially the polynuclear naphthalene, anthracene and phenanthrene, slowly undergo the direct thermal or DT osmylation to yield the same series of adducts. As such, there is a close relationship between the photoexcited state leading to CT osmylation and the activated complex in DT osmylation. Indeed the formation of the highly unusual adduct A by OsO, addition to the terminal ring of anthracene binds in common the transition state for DT osmylation and the ion-pair collapse in CT osmylation. Thus the electron-transfermechanism in Scheme IV employs the adiabatic ion pair (eq 20) to a m u n t for the same regiospecificities in DT osmylations. Such a unified view of arene osmylation can be extended to the promoted thermal or PT osmylation via the five-coordinate Os04(py), as commonly practiced for bis-hydroxylation of alkenes.
-
Oxo-metals have drawn increased attention as viable oxidation catalysts for various types of oxygen-atom transfers to organic and biochemical However only scant mechanistic understanding exists of the oxidation pathways, certainly with respect to the nature of the activation bamer and the identification of the reactive intermediate(s). Among oxo-metals, osmium tetroxide is a particularly intriguing oxidant since it is known to rapidly oxidize various types of alkenes, but it nonetheless eschews the electron'-rich aromatic hydrocarbons like benzene and naphthaleneU3-' Such selectivities do not obviously derive from differences in the donor properties of the hydrocarbons since the oxidation (ionization) potentials of arenes are actually less than those of alkenes.E The similarity in the electronic interactions of arena and alkenes toward osmium tetroxide relates to the series of electron donor-acceptor (EDA) complexes formed with both types of hydrocarbons, i.e."' CAr.
Os041
&
o\Os/p
\o
& CAlk.0~043
(1)
(1) Organic Synthesis by Oxidation with Metal Compounds; Mijs, W. J.; de Jonge, C. R. H. I., Eds.; Plenum: New York, 1986. See, also: Holm, R. H. Chem. Rev. 1987,87, 1401. (2) Sheldon, R. A.; Kochi, J. K. Metal-Catalyzed Oxidations of Organic Compounds; Academic: New York, 1981. (3) (a) Hofmann, K. A. Chem. Ber. 1912,45,3329. (b) Hofmann, K. A.; Ehrhart, 0.; Schneider, 0. Chem. Ber. 1913, 46, 1657. (4) (a) Criegee, R. Liebigs Ann. 1936,522,75. (b) Criegee, R.; Marchand, B.; Wannowius, H. Liebigs Ann. 1942, 550, 99. ( 5 ) SchrMer, M. Chem. Rev. 1980, 80, 187. (6) Griffith, W. P. Chemistry of the Rarer Platinum Metals (Os, Ru, Ir and Rh); Wiley Interscience: New York, 1967. (7) (a) Livingstone, S.E. Comprehensive Inorganic Chemistty; "Chemistry of Ruthenium, Rhodium Palladium, Osmium, Iridium and Platinum", Pergamon: New York, 1973; Chapter 43. (b) Heaton, B. T. In Annual Reports Inorganic and General Syntheses; Niedenzu, K., Zimmer, H., Eds.; Academic: New York, 1974. (8) For leading references, see: Fukuzumi, S.; Kochi, J. K. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1982, 104,7599. (9) Nugent. W. A. J. Org. Chem. 1980, 45, 4533. (10) Hammond, P. R.; Lake, R. R. J . Chem. SOC.A 1971, 3819. (11) Burkhardt, L. A.; Hammond, P. R.; Knipe. R. H.: Lake. R. R. J . Chem. SOC.A 1971, 3789.
Common to both arenes and alkenes is the immediate appearance of similar colors that are diagnostic of charge-transfer (CT) absorptions arising from the electronic excitation (hvcr) of the EDA complexes formed in eq 1 As such, the similarity in the color changes point to electronic interactions in the arene complex [Ar, Os04] that mirror those extant in the alkene complex [Alk, .I23I3
os041.I4
The charge-transfer colors of the alkene EDA complexes are fleeting, and they are not usually observed owing to the rapid followup rate of osmylation?J" i.e.
By contrast, simple (monocyclic) arenes do not afford thermal adducts with osmium tetroxide, benzene actually being a most desirable solvent for alkene hydroxylation.Is However, with some extended polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons such as benzpyrene, dibenzanthracene, and cholanthrene, a thermal reaction does lead to multiple osmate adducts and finally to polyhydric alcohol^.*^*^^ Tricyclic aromatic hydrocarbons such as phenanthrene show in(12) Foster, R. F. Charge-Transfer Complexes in Organic Chemistry; Academic: New York, 1969. (13) Andrews, L. J.; Keefer, R. M. Molecular Complexes in Organic Chemistry; Holden-Day: San Francisco, 1964. (14) (a) Hanna, M.W.; Lippert, J. L. In Molecular Complexes; Foster, R., Ed.; Crane, Russak & Co.: New York, 1973; Chapter I. (b) The implications of a common CT relationship of arene and alkene donors toward the same electrophile (bromine) was established earlier. See: Fukuzumi, S.; Kochi, J. K. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1982,104,7599. (c) For a discussion of EDA complexes as obligatory intermediates, see: footnotes 19 and 20 in Fukuzumi et al. (Fukuzumi, S.; Kochi, J. K. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1980, 102, 2141). (1 5) Fieser, L. F.; Fieser, M. Reagentsfor Organic Synfhesis;Wiley: New York, 1967-1985. (16) (a) Cook, J. W.; Schoental, R. J . Chem. SOC.1948, 170. (b) Cook, J. W.; Loudon, J. D.; Williamson, W. F. J . Chem. SOC.1950, 911. (17) (a) Criegee, R.; Hoger, E.; Huber, G.; Knick, P.; Marktscheffel, F.; Schellenberger, H. Liebigs Ann. 1956, 599, 81.
0002-7863/88/ 15 10-8207$01.50/0 0 1988 American Chemical Society
8208
Wallis and Kochi
J . Am. Chem. Soc.. Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988 A
B
C
0)
u
C
0
n
L
0 YI
n
a
W a v e l e n g t h
,
n m
Figure 1. Charge-transfer absorption bands from dichloromethane solutions containing 0.1 M Os04 and (A) 0.1 M benzene, durene, and pentamethylbenzene; (B) 0.1 M naphthalene, 1,4-dimethylnaphthalene,and 1-methoxynaphthalene;(C) 0.05 M 9,lO-dibromoanthracene (X2), 0.1 M anthracene, and 9,1O-dimethylanthracene.
termediate reactivity with osmium tetroxide to afford (over several weeks) the 1:l adduct, i.e.4b916a
Table I. Charge-Transfer Absorption Spectra of the EDA
Complexes of Various Arenes and Osmium Tetroxide" arene
u
benzene mesitylene durene naphthalene
u
A
phenanthrene
hexamethylbenzene 1,4-dimethylnaphthalene 1-methoxynaphthalene
W0'
hvcr e [Ar*+, OsO,'-]
fast
adduct
(4)
it is hereafter referred to simply as charge-transfer osmylation. Third, the dual pathways of thermal and charge-transfer osmylation allow the regio- and stereochemistry for Os04addition to be quantitatively compared, especially in the Os04adducts of the polycyclic arenes: phenanthrene, anthracene, and naphthalene. Fourth, the activation process for CT osmylation can be unambiguously established by the application of time-resolved (picosecond) spectroscopy for direct observation of the reactive intermediates, as previously defined in other aromatic C T proAccordingly, our initial task in this study is to establish the common CT character of the EDA complexes of Os04 with (18) Cook, J. W.; Schoental, R. Nature (London) 1948, 161, 237. (19) Wallis, J. M.; Kochi, J. K. J . Org. Chem. 1988, 53, 1679. (20) (a) Hilinski, E. F.; Masnovi, J. M.; Kochi, J. K.; Rentzepis, P. M. J . Am. Chem. Soc. 1984,106,8071. (b) Mataga, N. Pure Appl. Chem. 1984, 15, 1255. Masnovi, J. M.; Korp, J. D.; Kochi, J. K. J. Phys. Chem. 1985.89, 5387. (c) Masnovi, J. M.; Huffman, S. C.; Kochi, J. K.; Hilinski, E. F.; Rentzepis, P. M. Chem. Phys. Lett. 1984, 106, 20.
solvent
n-C6H,4 CC14 h h 9.23b 8.42b 390 395 8.05b 398 402 8.12c 416 426 -406 418 8.1' 474 472 7.85b 7.7Sd
468
7.72c
484 516 520 548
2,6-dimethoxynaphthalene 7.58f
Osmylation in eq 3 occurs at the HOMO site of the arene in a manner analogous to that observed in alkene osmylations (eq 2). In this context, anthracene is a particularly noteworthy substrate since it is purported to afford an unusual 2:l adduct by oxidative attack at a terminal ring in preference to the most reactive meso (9,1O-) positions.18 We believe that the inextensible range of arene reactivities offers the unique opportunity to probe the mechanism of osmium tetroxide oxidations for four principal reasons. First, the EDA complexes in eq 1 relate alkenes directly to arenes via the oxo-metal interactions in the precursors relevant to oxidation. Second, the thermal osmylation of polynuclear arenes (see eq 3) has an exact counterpart in the photostimulated osmylations that are widely applicable to even such otherwise inactive arenes as benzene.19 Since this charge-transfer process is readily associated with excitation (hvC7)of the EDA complex to the ion pair, Le. [Ar, OsO,]
IP (eV)
474 492 524
CH2C12 h h h h h 442 -450
470 490 510
anthracene 7.43' 532 9methylanthracene 7.259 558 530 9-bromoanthracene 7.478 496 508 490 9,lO-dibromoanthracene 7.548 468 486 -466 576 578 556 9,lO-dimethylanthracene 7.1 1' 'In solutions of 0.1 M arene and lo-* M Os04 at 25 OC. Reference 21. Reference 22. dReference 23a. CReference23b. /Reference 23c. 9Reference 24. A, obscured. the arene series (benzene, naphthalene, and anthracene) as well as the structural elucidation of their Os04 adducts by X-ray crystallographic and spectral analyses.
Results I. Charge-TransferComplexes of Os04 with Benzenes, Naphthalenes, and Anthracenes. A colorless solution of osmium tetroxide in n-hexane or dichloromethane upon exposure to benzene turned yellow instantaneously. With durene an orange coloration developed, and a clear bright red solution resulted from hexamethylbenzene. The progressive change in color from dark yellow, yellow-orange, to orange characterized the binuclear aromatic series: naphthalene, 1,4-dimethylnaphthalene,and 1-methoxynaphthalene under the same conditions. With the family of anthracenes, the 9,lO-dibromo derivative immediately developed an orange color with OsO,, whereas the parent hydrocarbon and the 9,lO-dimethyl analogue afforded purple- and mauve-colored solutions, respectively. The quantitative effects of these dramatic color changes are illustrated in Figure 1 by the spectral shifts of the electronic absorption bands that accompanied the variations in aromatic conjugation and substituents. For example, the yellow color from benzene appeared as a nondescript shift of the end absorption of OsO, to beyond 380 nm in Figure 1A. The marked spectral change with naphthalene was noted as the absorption band with a shoulder at X 420 nm in Figure 1B. Finally the anthracene color constituted a distinctive new absorption band in Figure 1C with A,,, = 510 nm. Such a progressive bathochromic shift parallels the decrease in the arene ionization potentials (IP) in the following order: benzene 9.23 eV, naphthalene 8.12 eV,
-
J. Am. Chem. Soc., Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988 8209
AromaticlEDA Complexes with Osmium( VIII) Tetroxide anthracene 7.43 eV.2i-24 Indeed the general relationship between the spectral band energy and the ionization potential applies to all the substituted arenes examined in this study (Table I). In particular, increasing the number of methyl groups in benzene to durene and pentamethylbenzene resulted in a gradual red shift25 of the new absorption bands as clearly defined in Figure 1A. The same trend was observed with the naphthalenes and anthracenes. Furthermore methoxy and bromo substituents have diametrically opposed effects as illustrated in Figure 1 (parts B and C, respectively) in accord with their electron-releasing and electronwithdrawing properties on the arene IPS (Table I).26 Such spectral behaviors are diagnostic of electron donor-acceptor complexes ' new such as those formed in eq 1. According to M ~ l l i k e n , ~the absorption bands derive from charge-transfer excitation (hvm in eq 4) with the energetics defined by12 hVcT = I P - E A - W (5) where E A is the electron affinity of the OsO, acceptor and LJ is the dissociation energy of the C T excited ion-pair state. The empirical plot that is illustrated in Figure 2 defines the linear relationship hVcT = 0.85IP - 3.92 (6) with the reasonable correlation coefficient of r = 0.95. It accords quantitatively with eq 5 in which E A is perforce constant for the common OsO, acceptor, and is within the experimental scatter relatively invariant for structurally related arene donors.28 Table I includes the charge-transfer absorption bands of the a r e n e 4 s 0 4 complexes in three typical solvents, n-hexane, carbon tetrachloride, and dichloromethane with dielectric constants of 1.89, 2.24, and 9.08, re~pectively.~~ The slight blue-shift of X,that consistently accompanied the solvent change from hexane to the more polar dichloromethane is a spectral feature that has been noted with a variety of other EDA complexes.30 The formation constants K for the areneOs0, complexes were evaluated in a pair of typical solvents (Table 11) by the spectrophotometric procedure of Benesi and Hildebrand," i.e. [OS041 ---
1
i1.8
2A
c l
7.2
,
l
,
7,6
I
8.0
I
8.4
1
I P , eV Figure 2. General correlation of the CT transition energy (hvm) of the arene-OsO, complexes in CCI, with the ionization potential of various arenes as indicated.
Figure 3.
ORTEP diagram of the 2:l benzene adduct B shows the anti stereochemistry of the pair of osmate esters.
1 1 (7 ) KeCTIArl ECT where ACTis the molar absorbance and ecT the extinction coefficient of the C T band at the monitoring wavelength under conditions where [Ar] >> [Os04]. Owing to the limited values of K however, a small negative intercept often resulted from an otherwise excellent linear fit of the experimental data ( r > 0.99). This graphical feature has been previously noted by Hammond,lo and it largely vitiates a quantitative determination of the formation constant of weak EDA complexes.32 Accordingly, to emphasize the uniformity of the three classes of arenes examined in this study, we merely list the values of the product KCCTin Table II.33 Indeed the colored complexes are so weak
that all attempts at isolation, including the freezing of various mixtures of OsO, in neat aromatic donors, merely led to phase separation and discharge of color.1° Thus the absorption bands are properly ascribed to contact charge transfer.34 It is also noteworthy that solutions of OsO, and aromatic donors exhibited new C T absorption bands only in highly nonpolar solvents such as alkanes and chloroalkanes. In the more polar solvents acetone, dioxane, or acetonitrile, no new absorption bands could be discerned. Similarly upon the addition of small amounts of pyridine to a hexane solution of OsO, and arene, the C T colors were immediately discharged, undoubtedly due to the preferential coordination of the Lewis base with the acceptor.3s
(21) Howell, J. 0.;Goncalves, J. M.; Amatore, C.; Klasinc, L.; Wightman, R. M.; Kochi, J. K. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1984, 106, 3968. (22) Handbook of Chemistry and Physics; Weast, R. C., Ed.;CRC Press: Cleveland, OH, 1974. See also ref 27b. (23) (a) Nounou, P. J . Chim. Phys. 1966,63,994. (b) Bock, H.; Wagner, G.; Kroner, J. Chem. Ber. 1972,105, 3850. (c) Nagy, 0.S.;Dupire, S.;Nagy, J. B. Tetrahedron 1975, 31, 2453. (24) Masnovi, J. M.; Seddon, E. A.; Kochi, J. K. Can. J . Chem. 1984,62, 2552. (25) Heilbronner, E.; Maier, J . P. In Electron Spectroscopy; Brundle, C. R., Baker, A. D., Eds.; Academic: New York, 1977, Vot. I, p 250 ff. (26) Lowry, T. H.; Richardson, K. S. Mechanism and Theory in Organic Chemisfry; Harper and Row: New York, 1981. (27) (a) Mulliken, R. S . J . Am. Chem. Soc. 1952, 74, 811. (b) Mulliken, R. S.; Person, W. B. Molecular Complexes, A Lecture and Reprint Volume; Wiley: New York, 1969. (28) For a recent discussion, see ref 17 and 21, and Klingler et al. (Klingler, R. S.; Fukuzumi, S.; Kochi, J. K. Inorganic Chemistry: Toward the 21st Century; ACS Symposium Series 21 I ; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1983). (29) Dean, J. A. Lange's Handbook of Chemistry, XI11 ed.;McGraw-Hill Book Co.: New York, 1985. (30) Foster, R. F. Chapter 12 in ref 12. (31) Benesi, H. A.; Hildebrand, J. H. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1949, 71,2703. (32) See: Foster, R. F. Molecular Complexes 1974, 2, 107.
11. Molecular Structures of the OsO, Adducts to Benzene,
ACT
+-
oso45 Oso,(py)
(8)
Naphthalene, and Anthracene. The elucidation of the OsO, adducts from each class of arene was critically important to thermal as well as charge-transfer osmylations, and their structures are thus presented individually below. Benzene adduct was obtained as a deep brown amorphous solid from the charge-transfer osmylation (vide infra) in hexane.Ig Owing to the insolubility of this material, it was immediately converted to the pyridine derivative B with the composition (C&)(OSO,),(py), established by elemental analysis.36 The
-
(33) The value of K 0.3 M-' for arenesI9 compares with 48 M-' for the formation of Os04(py) in eq 8. See Supplementary Material Available for Table 11. (34) Tamres, M.; Strong, R. L. Molecular Association; Foster, R. F., Ed.; Academic: New York: 1979; Vol. 11, p 331 ff. (35) (a) Hair, M. L.; Robinson, P. L. J. Chem. Soc. 1958,106; 1960,2775. (b) Cleare, M. J.; Hydes, P. C.; Griffith, W. P.; Wright, M. J. J. Chem. Soc., Dalton Trans. 1977, 941. (c) Griffith, W. P.; Skapski, A. C.; Woode, K. A,; Wright, M. J. Inorg. Chim. Acta 1978, L413. (d) Tschugajett, L.; Tschernjajett, J. 2. Anorg. Chem. 1928, 172, 216. (36) Elemental analysis by Atlantic Microlabs, Inc., Atlanta, GA.
Wallis and Kochi
8210 J . Am. Chem. Soc., Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988 infrared spectrum of the 2:l adduct B revealed a strong band at 828 cm-l diagnostic of the trans-dioxoosmium moiety +Os= 0.37 The pyridine ligands appeared in the 'H N M R spectrum of B as three resonances at 6 8.92, 7.83, and 7.44 in a characteristic 8:4:8 intensity ratio for the CY,7 , and @ protons, r e s p e ~ t i v e l y . ~ ~ These diagnostic resonances were used to calibrate the remaining 'H resonances at 6 6.12 (d, 2 H) and 5.17 (m, 4 H ) for the unique pair of olefinic protons and the pairs of inequivalent hydrogens bound to carbon atoms bearing the two osmate groups, respectively, in the structure shown below. In order to establish the
B osmate stereochemistry, we attempted to grow a single crystal of B for X-ray crystallography. Since our repeated and varied attempts yielded only unsuitable microcrystals, we synthesized B by an independent route. Thus cis-l,2-dihydrocatechol was first converted to the mono-osmate ester Bl in 70% yield by a standard esterification procedure described in eq 9a.39 One of the remaining
(9a,b)
double bonds in Bl was then thermally osmylated in eq 9b by treatment with 1 equiv of Os04in dichloromethane containing 2 equiv of pyridine at 25 O C to afford a new sample of B that was spectrally identical with the 2:l adduct obtained via CT osmylation (vide supra). Unlike the latter however, the careful crystallization of the sample prepared via eq 9 led to a dark brown, monoclinic crystal of B.40 The ORTEP diagram in Figure 3 obtained from the single crystal of B shows the skew-boat conformation of the cyclohexene skeleton and the pair of osmate esters in an anti relationship above and below the six-membered ring. Both osmium(V1) atoms are octahedral with each pyridine trans to a bridging p o x 0 ligand so that the N-Os-0 angle was close to the ideal 180°. The two terminal oxo ligands were however significantly distorted away from this ideal angle a t 163 and 1 5 8 O , as previously noted in related structure^.^^*^^ The 2:l adduct could be further transformed into the 3:l adduct B' by treatment with another equivalent of Os04and pyridine.
Figure 4. ORTEP diagram of the 2:l adduct A showing the addition of two OsO, with anti stereochemistry to the terminal ring of anthracene. Anthracene adduct A was obtained as dark brown crystals from the thermal osmylation (vide infra) with 2 equiv of Os04 in benzene solution containing 4 equiv of pyridine. The 2:l stoichiometry (C14H10)(O~04)2(py)4 was established for A by elemental analysis, and the infrared and 'H NMR spectra revealed the strong band at 834 cm-' of the trans-dioxoosmium moiety and the two pairs of coordinated pyridine ligands analogous to those observed in the benzene adduct B. The diagnostic pyridine resonances in the 'H N M R spectrum of A were used to calibrate (vide supra) the remaining aromatic resonances as multiplets at 6 7.33 (2 H ) and 7.80 (2 H ) together with a unique, sharp singlet at 6 8.04 (2 H). The protons attached to the carbon atoms bearing the two osmate groups appeared as a pair of 1:1 doublets at 6 5.25 (2 H) and 5.90 (2 H). The absence of 'H resonances assignable to olefinic C-H bonds and the appearance of the unique singlet (suggestive of the meso protons of anthracenels) supported a 2:l adduct at the terminal ring, i.e.
A
B' (37) (a) Griffith, W. P. Coord. Chem. Rev. 1970, 5 , 459. (b) Marzilli, L. G.; Hanson, B. E.;Kistenmacher, T. J.; Epps, L. A.; Stewart, R. C. Inorg. Chem. 1976, 15, 1661. (38) (a) Subbaraman, L. R.; Subbaraman, J.; Behrmann, E. J. Inorg. Chem. 1972,11,2621; (b) Subbaraman, L. R.; Subbaraman, J.; Behrmann, E.J. Bioinorg. Chem. 1971, I , 35. (39) (a) Subbaraman, L. R.; Subbaraman, J.; Behrmann, E. J. J . Urg. Chem. 1973,38, 1499. (b) Griffith, W. P.; Rossetti, R. J . Chem. Soc.,Dalton Tram. 1972, 1449. See also ref 4b. (40) The difference probably lies in a slight impurity of the syn isomer of B prepared from the CT osmylation. (41) (a) Cartwright, B. A.; Griffith, W. P.; Schrder, M.; Skapski, A. C. Inorg. Chim. Acra 1981, 53, L129. (b) Cartwright, B. A.; Griffith, W. P.; SchrGder, M.; Skapski, A. C. J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun. 1978,853. (c) Gulliver, D. J.; Levason, W. Coord. Chem. Reu. 1982, 46, 1 . (42) (a) Conn, J. F.; Kim, J. J.; Suddath, F. L.; Blattmann, P.; Rich, A. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1974, 96, 7152. (b) Neidle, S.; Stuart, D. I. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1976,418,226. (c) Prangt, T.; Pascard, C. Acta Crystallogr. 1977, 833, 621.
This structure thus accords with the earlier formulation based on degradative studies.ls Nonetheless the critical importance of the anthracene adduct necessitated its structural confirmation by the single-crystal determination (see Experimental Section) illustrated in Figure 4. The ORTEP diagram of A shows the pair of osmate esters on the terminal ring to occupy the same anti stereochemical relationship as that found in the benzene adduct B. Indeed the bond lengths and angles in the osymlated six-membered rings of A and B bear a strong structural similarity to each other (see Experimental Section). Phenanthrene adduct P from the thermal osmylation (vide infra) was obtained as the 1:l adduct (C14H10)(OS04)(py)2, as established by elemental analysis.36 The molecular structure of P could be readily characterized solely by spectroscopic methods without recourse to X-ray crystallography. Thus the presence of the tramdioxoosmium(V1) moiety was revealed by the strong IR band at 834 cm-', and the pair of associated pyridine ligands appeared as the characteristic set of three resonances at 6 8.86, 7.72, and 7.43 with the intensity ratio of 4:2:4 for the CY,y, and @ protons, respectively. The latter was used to calibrate the remaining 'H
AromaticlEDA Complexes with Osmium(VIII) Tetroxide Table 111. Direct Thermal (DT) Osmylation of Polycyclic Arenes with OSO,~
temp time conv,* arene (M) solvent ("C) (h) adduct (X) phenanthrene (0.10) n-C6H14 25 1032 P 7 10 anthracene (0.037) n-C6H14 25 1224 Ad-' 31 AdJ 68 anthracene (0.085) n-C7H16C 100 132 Nd,g 3 naphthalene (0.12) n-C7HL6' 100 1,4-dimethyl- (0.048) n-C6HI4 25 1224 NmZh 8 naphthalene In 5 mL of solvent containing 2 equiv of Os04 only and subsequent treatment to the pyridine derivative. Conversion to the combined isomers (as applicable) based on Ar charged (see footnote 43). CIna sealed tube. dMixture of anti/syn isomers (see text). r60/40. f67/33. #21/79. h 1,4-Dimethylanalogue of N as a single isomer. resonances a t 6 7.84 (2 H), 7.66 (2 H), and 7.33 (4 H ) for the biphenyl moiety as well as the unique singlet at 6 5.42 (2 H ) for the pair of equivalent protons bound to the osmate-bearing carbon in the structure below. This structure thus accords with that proposed earlier by Criegee and co-workers$b based on the hydrolysis of the osmate followed by dehydration to 9-phenanthrol.
,.
U
P Naphthalene adduct N from the thermal osmylation with a mixture of OsO, and pyridine consisted of the 2:l adduct (CIOH8)(O~04)2(py)4 by elemental analysis. The infrared and 'H N M R spectrum of N revealed the characteristic band at 833 cm-I of the trans-O=Os=O moiety, and the two pairs of coordinated pyridines as described above. The latter was used to calibrate the two aromatic resonances at 6 7.54 (2 H ) and 7.80 (2 H). The protons attached to the osmylated positions appeared as doublets at 6 5.22 (2 H ) and 5.75 (2 H) in the IH N M R spectrum and as two singlets a t 6 89.6 and 87.3 in the I3C(lHJ N M R spectrum. These pairs of resonances suggested N to have a structure with C, or C, symmetry, as required for the bis-osmylation of a single naphthalene ring, i.e.
N By analogy with the benzene adduct B (Figure 3) and the anthracene adduct A (Figure 4), we infer that the naphthalene adduct N has the same anti stereochemistry for the pair of osmate esters. 111. Thermal Osmylation of Naphthalene, Anthracene, and Phenanthrene. Benzene showed no signs of osmylation in the absence of light, as indicated by the persistence of the yellow color of the [C6H6, OsO,] complex in n-hexane even upon prolonged standing. On the other hand, the orange CT color of the phenanthrene complex [C14H10, Os04] slowly diminished over a period of weeks, accompanied by the formation of a dark brown precipitate of the composition (C14H100s04).Dissolution of the solid P as the sole in pyridine yielded the 1:l adduct (CI4HIOOsO4py2) product in very low conversion (Table III).43 Anthracene behaved (43)Conversion refers to the amount of adduct formed relative to OsO, charged. The yield based on OsO, consumed is close to quantitative.
J . Am. Chem. SOC.,Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988 821 1
similarly to afford the 2:l adduct in 10% conversion only after 2 months. The thermal osymlation could be expedited in a purple solution of refluxing n-heptane (100 "C) to effect a 68% conversion in 30 h. However even at these relatively elevated temperatures, naphthalene was converted to the corresponding 2:l adduct to only a limited extent (entry 4, Table 111). In every case, the dark brown primary adducts were easily collected from the reaction mixture as insoluble solids and then immediately ligated with pyridine for structural characterization, as presented above. Indeed we found that the characteristic IR and IH N M R spectra of the anthracene, phenanthrene, and naphthalene adducts such as A, P, and N, respectively, allowed the ready analysis of the osmylated adducts listed in Table 111 (see the Experimental Section for details). Since these adducts were derived from the arenes with only Os04present, the chemical transformation is hereinafter designated as the DIRECT THERMAL or DT osmylation. For comparison, we also osmylated the same polynuclear arenes in the presence of promoter bases, typically pyridine.44 Under these conditions, the adducts A, P, and N were formed directly in the reaction mixture and at substantially increased rates of reaction, as previously established with the related family of alkene substrate^.^^ Such a procedure differs visually from the DT osmylation described above in that the charge-transfer colors in Table I are not observed as transients, owing to the preferential complexation of Os04 with pyridine as described in eq 8. Accordingly, this PROMOTED THERMAL or PT osmylation is to be distinguished by the enhanced reactivity of the pyridine complex (see eq 8) relative to the free Os04 in the DT osmylation. The corresponding increase in the yields of adducts such as A, P, and N within a shorter span of reaction times is apparent from the comparison of the results of DT and PT osmylations in Tables I11 and IV, respectively. IV. Charge-Transfer Osmylation of Benzene, Naphthalene, and Anthracene. The various charge-transfer colors in Table I for the different arene complexes with OsO, were persistent for days. However when the colored solutions were deliberately exposed to visible light with energy sufficient to excite only the chargetransfer band, they always deposited a highly insoluble, dark brown solid reminiscent of the OsO, adducts obtained from the direct thermal osmylation of arenes (see Table 111). Since this actinic process must have arisen via the electronic excitation of the EDA complex according to eq 4, it is referred to hereafter as CHARGE-TRANSFER or C T osmylation for the individual arenes described below. Benzene. The exposure of the pale yellow solution of benzene and OsO, in n-hexane to filtered light with X > 380 nm corresponded to the irradiation of the low-energy tail of the C T band (see Figure 1A). Nonetheless, a rapid discharge of color occurred, and a deep brown solid separated from the reaction mixture. Similarly, the bright yellow solution of Os04 dissolved in neat benzene rapidly became turbid and deposited the same brown powder upon irradiation. The amorphous-looking solid was insoluble in chlorinated hydrocarbons, acetone, and water, but it dissolved rapidly in pyridine to give a deep red-brown solution that yielded red-brown microcrystals of B (Table V) .46 Naphthalene. Irradiation of the dark yellow solution of naphthalene and OsO, in n-hexane with filtered light immediately led to a dark brown precipitate, which was collected and treated with pyridine to afford the 2:l adduct N as listed in Table V. For these experiments, the focussed beam from a Hg-Xe lamp was passed through a sharp cutoff filter to ensure that only light at the wavelengths X > 415 nm impinged on the photochemical cell. An inspection of Figure 1B shows that such irradiation could excite only the charge-transfer band of the complex [CloHs,OsO,]. It was thus established that the appearance of the dark brown precipitate was the direct consequence of the population of the CT excited state. The C T osmylation of 1,4-dimethylnaphthalene (44)For structural information see Griffith et al. in ref 35c. (45)Clark, R. L.;Behrmann, E. J. inorg. Chem. 1975, 14, 1425. (46)Similar 2:l adducts were previously derived from the CT osmylation of mesitylene and hexamethylbenzene.19
8212 J . Am. Chem. Sac., Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988 Table IV. Promoted Thermal (PT) Osmylation of Polycyclic Arenes with OsOd-Pyridine" time conv,' % (M) solventb promoterC (h) adductd arene phenanthrene bz py-ds 336 Pf 86 (0.17) (0.41) PY 312 P 75 anthracene bz py 48 A 72 (0.11) anthracene bz py-ds 72 A' 83 (0.12) 9-methyl (0.12) bz py-d, 144 Am'a 82 9-methoxy bz py-dS 96 AoLh 83 (0.10) 9-bromo (0.057) bz py-d, 240 Ab'J 78 9-cyano bz py-ds 288 &/J 78 (0.071) 9-nitro 71 bz py-d, 288 A,/.' (0.059) 9,lO-dimethyl (0.083) 24 A,,*' "' 68 bz py-ds 9,lO-dibromo (0.092) 72 bz py-dS 336 Ab2JJ 29 bz py 720 N naphthalene (0.10) 52 bz py-d, 1680 Nf naphthalene (0.066) 336 N,,fG 20 bz py-d5 1,4-dimethyl (0.11) PY (0.18) 168 N,f 73 73 bz py-ds 888 N,f.q 1-methoxy (0.17) 61 bz py-dS 888 No,'-' 2,6-dimethoxy (0.11) "In 5 mL of solvent at 25 "C. bbz = benzene, py = pyridine. c 2 equiv relative to 050,. dFor structural assignment of the single isomer, see Experimental Section. 'Conversion based on arene charged. 'With py-ds ligands. $9-methyl-A. 9-methoxy-A. '9-bromo-A. '9-cyano-A. '9nitro-A. "'9,lO-dimethyl-A, "9,lO-dibromo-A. p 1.4-dimethyl-N. q 1methoxy-N. '2,6-dimethoxy-N.
under the same photochemical conditions resulted in the 2: 1 adduct, namely
Wallis and Kochi
Phenanthrene. The purple solution of phenanthrene and OsO, in carbon tetrachloride was irradiated at h > 380 nm to ensure that only the C T absorption band was excited (see Table I). The dark brown precipitate after treatment with pyridine yielded red-brown crystals of a single isomer of the 1:1 adduct P (vide supra). Comparative results in Tables V and 111 indicated that a possible competition from the DT osmylation was much too slow for any significant contribution to the formation of P under these photochemical conditions. Anthracene. Of the arenes examined in this study, anthracene was unique in that it afforded two entirely different types of products upon the photoexcitation of the EDA complex [CI4HIO, OsO,] in dichloromethane and hexane, despite only minor solvent effects on the charge-transfer bands in Table I. Irradiation of the purple solution of anthracene and OsO, in dichloromethane a t X > 480 nm yielded the 2:1 adduct A together with its syn isomer (vide supra) as the sole products in Table VI. On the other hand, irradiation of the same purple-colored solution but in nhexane under otherwise identical conditions led to a small (but discrete) amount of a refractory black precipitate, the analysis of which accorded with the polymeric formulation ( 0 ~ 0 as ~ ) ~ described in the Experimental Section. Workup of the hexane solution yielded anthraquinone as the major product contaminated of the 2:l adduct A. Interestingly, even with only traces (el%) higher yields of anthraquinone were obtained from 9-bromo-, 9-nitro-, and 9,lO-dibromoanthracene when the CT osmylation was carried out in n-hexane. Such an accompanying loss of the electronegative substituents (X = Br, NOz) probably occurred via osmylation at the meso (9,lO-) positions followed by oxidative decomposition of the unstable adduct with a stoichiometry such as41
as described in the Experimental Section.
(10)
Table V. Charge-Transfer (CT) Osmylation of Benzene, Naphthalene, and Phenanthrene with 0sO4" Os04 time &radb conv arene (mmol) (mmol) solvent (h) (nm) adduct ( los mmol) benzeneC 0.63 C6H6 3.5 380 B 3.2 C6H14 8.5 415 Nd 2.3 naphthalene (0.78) 0.59 (0.61) 0.90 CH2C12 7.5 415 N' 0.5 naphthalene 1,4-dimethyInaphthalene (0.68) 0.57 C6H14 4.3 425 "2 5.0 2,6-dimethoxynaphthalene (0.36) 0.76 CH2CI2 10.0 415 415 nm. The absorption spectra of dianthracene and OsO, (---) at the same concentrations are also shown for comparison. (-e-)
It is noteworthy that neither 9-cyano-, 9-methyl-, nor 9,lO-dimethylanthracene yielded anthraquinone when the C T csmylations were carried out in hexane. The oxidation product that accompanied the small amount of OsOz from 9-cyanoanthracene in hexane was not identified. Only a 2:l adduct (and no reduced OsOz) was detected from both 9-methyl- and 9,lO-dimethylanthracene, as listed in Table VI. Dianthracene. As the head-to-tail 9,10-dimer, dianthracene is optically transparent below 300 nm owing to the presence of only benzenoid chromophores. Thus the solution of osmium tetroxide admixed with dianthracene in dichloromethane afforded immediately the yellow color characteristic of the EDA complex of benzenoid aromatics. However the irradiation of this solution at A > 410 nm using a sharp cutoff filter differed dramatically from that observed with benzene (vide supra). First, the yellow solution turned purple, and the change in the absorption spectrum = 510 nm, clearly identified the growth of a new band with ,A, which was diagnostic of the [anthracene, Os04] complex described in Table I. The series of color changes are illustrated in Figure 5 for the 9-methyl analogue owing to its slightly enhanced solubility. Second, only small amounts of OsO, adducts to anthracene were formed under these conditions, as indicated by the trace observation of dark brown precipitate (vide supra). Indeed the quantitative analysis of the solution by gas chromatography (following the removal of OsO,) indicated cycloreversion according to the stoichiometry shown in eq 1 1. Since this fragmentation arises directly via photoexcitation of the EDA complex of dianthracene with OsO,, it is designated as charge-transfer cycloreversion.
by the decrease in the absorbance of the charge-transfer band. V. Time-Resolved Spectra of the Reactive Intermediates in Charge-Transfer Osmylation. In order to identify the reactive intermediates in the charge-transfer excitation of arene-0s0, complexes, we examined the time-resolved spectra immediately following the application of a 30-ps pulse consisting of the second harmonic at 532 nm of a mode-locked Nd:YAG laser. The wavelength of this excitation source corresponded to the maxima (or near maxima) of the charge-transfer absorption bands of the series of anthracene complexes with osmium tetroxide illustrated in Figure 1C. Accordingly, the time-resolved spectra obtained from the anthracene-OsO, system related directly to the C T osmylation in Table VI since there was no ambiguity about either the adventitious local excitationz7of complexed (or uncomplexed) chromophores or the photogeneration of intermediates that did not arise from the photoexcitation of the EDA complex. Indeed, intense absorptions were observed in the visible region between 700-800 nm from the excitation of the anthracene-Os0, complexes, as shown in Figure 6. The time-resolved absorption spectra from anthracene and 9-cyanoanthracene in Figure 6 (parts A and B, respectiveIy) represented the composite (normalized) of six spectra taken in the time interval between 20 and 50 ps following the application of the 532-nm laser pulse. Comparison with the steady-state absorption spectra of the corresponding anthracene cation radicals (see insets) generated by the spectroelectrochemical te~hnique,,~ thus established the identity of the charge-transfer transient. Similar time-resolved spectra of arene cation radicals were obtained from the naphthalene EDA complexes despite the excitation of only the low-energy tails of the CT bands in Figure 1B with the 532-nm laser pulse. The slight red-shift in A, of the cation radical from the electron-rich 1,4-dimethylnaphthaIene (IP 7.78 eV) relative to that of naphthalene (IP 8.12 eV) is shown in Figure 7. For comparison, the time-resolved spectrum of the cation radical from 9,lO-dibromoanthracene (IP 7.54 eV) is also included in Figure 7C. VI. Temporal Evolution of Arene Cation Radicals during Charge-Transfer Osmylation. The transient absorption spectra in Figures 6 and 7 identify the arene cation radical (Ar'') as the initial reactive intermediate in C T osmylation. The evolution of the anthracene cation radical was followed by measuring the absorbance change at A,, = 742 nm (see Figure 6A) upon the charge-transfer excitation of the EDA complex with a single laser shot of 10 mJ. The time evolution of the absorbance shown in Figure 8 (left) includes the initial onset for -20 ps owing to the rise time of the 30-ps (fwhm) laser pulse. The first-order plot of the decay portion is shown in the inset to the figure. The latter was more clearly defined for the 9-cyanoanthracene cation radical in Figure 8 (right). Decay curves similar to those shown in Figure 8 were also observed for the disappearances of the cation radicals derived from the other arene-OsO, complexes listed in Table VIII. In each
-
Quantum yields for the CT osmylation of arenes and the CT cycloreversion of dianthracene in Table VI1 were measured with Reinecke salt a~tinometry,~ by following the changes in the arene concentrations spectrophotometrically. The same result (entry 2) was obtained when the course of CT osmylation was followed (47) (a) The formation of anthraquinone may of course be stepwise and involve the attachment of only one and not two oxygen(s) of OsO, to the anthracene. (b) The fates of the cleaved bromo and nitro substituents were not traced. (c) Although isotopic tracers were not employed, osmium tetroxide is the only source of oxygen in the system. (48) Wegner, E. E.; Adamson, A. W. J. Am. Chem. SOC.1966,88, 394.
(49) (a) Masnovi, .I.M.; Kochi, J. K.;Hilinski, E. F.; Rentzepis, P. M. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1986, 108, 1126. (b) With some other arenes, we observed spectral shifts between the time-resolved ps and steady-state spectra of the cation radicals (Sankararaman, S., unpublished results), and they will be elaborated later.
Wallis and Kochi
J . Am. Chem. SOC.,Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988
8214
A w
w
u z a
0
z
a m a
m
a
0, m
0
w
W
a
t
u)
m
a
a
0.1
L
L t-I
-I
w
W K
-
-k B
-
-
700
500
K
0
0
600
I
1
I
700
WAVELENGTH
(nm)
WAVELENGTH (nm)
Figure 6. Transient absorption spectrum of the cation radical from (A) anthracene and (B) 9-cyanoanthracene in CH2C12at -35 ps following the 532-nm C T excitation of the OsO, complex with 30-ps (fwhm) laser pulse. The insets are the steady-state spectra obtained by spectroelectrochemical generation in ref 49. A I
u w
z a
m K
-
I
B
I
I
I
m*
I
C I
I
-
2 m e w
2
c a -1 w
K
5 WAVELENGTH
(nm)
6 WAVELENGTH
(nm)
WAVELENGTH
If"
Figure 7. Time-resolved absorption spectra of (A) naphthalene, (B) 1,4-dimethylnaphthalene,and (C) 9,10-dibromoanthracene cation radicals generated in CH2C12during C T osmylation as in Figure 6. CN
-20
Time,
ps
20
60
80
Time,
ps
40
100
120
140
Figure 8. Typical appearance and decay of the C T transient from (left) anthracene and (right) 9-cyanoanthracene in dichloromethane by following = 742 and 758 nm, respectively. The inset shows the first-order plots of the absorbance decay subsequent to the the change of the absorbance at A, maximum at -20 ps.
case, the concentrations of the arene (usually of limited solubility) and osmium tetroxide were first optimized for maximum absorbance of the C T band. This procedure allowed the highest concentration to be obtained of the arene cation radical, the decays of which were all uniformly treated as first-order processes.50 The
magnitudes of the rate constant k, in Table VI11 were applicable t o the complete disappearance of Ar'+, as indicated by the return (50) The choice was dictated by the minimal role of diffusional processes on this time scale. For a discussion see ref 20 and 49.
J . Am. Chem. Soc., Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988 821 5
AromaticlEDA Complexes with Osmium( VIII) Tetroxide
-
Table VIII. First-Order Decay of Arene Cation Radicals during C T Osmylation' OsO, XAr+' kld arene (M) ( M ) AS3*' (nm) (lO-'os-I) (0.1 1) 0.10 1.58 742 anthracene 4.9 (0.13) 0.16 2.gC 750 5.3 0.17 1.08 (0.04) 9-bromo 720 5.6 0.28 1.74 (0.03) 697f 1.4 0.25 0.83 758 2.8 9-cyano (0.05) 9-nitro (0.05) 0.25 0.63 750 4.9 0.58 1.97 721 24 9,lO-dibromo (0.03) 1.30 phenanthrene 0.12 (0.35) 725 4.6 0.26 1.7 (0.54) naphthalene 710 4.5 0.10 2.0 1.4-dimethvl 740 2.n (0.33) "In CH,CI, at 25 OC, unless indicated otherwise. *Absorbance at the excitation wavelength. cAbsorption maximum of the arene cation radical. dData treated as a first-order decay. C T w independent ~ measurements. f I n hexane solution.
: I I j I ; I ! I i l ' I
t
a r e n e CT
-
: \ :
: ':
B
\ \ \
8
w
9
i
L!
WAVELENGTH (nn) Figure 10. Spontaneous formation of arene cations from the EDA complex of 2.5 X lo-, M 1,4-dimethoxynaphthaleneand 5 X lo-, M OsO, in hexane. The C T band at t = 0 is followed by the growth of the cation absorbance at t = 5, 10, and 15 min. The spectra of the separate arene and Os04 (---) are at the same concentrations. (e-)
L
2 .o
,
I
1
LO
1.5
0.5
Potential,
V
vs
,
I
0
-0,5
SCE
Figure 9. Cyclic voltammograms of (left) the initial positive scan of 5 X lo-' M of anthracene and (right) initial negative scan of 5 X lo-' M osmium tetroxide in dichloromethane containing 0.1 M TBAH at u = 200, 400, and 600 mV s-l.
of the cation-radical absorbances to the base line. No other transient absorptions were observed in this spectral region, even when the time-resolved spectroscopy was carried out on the extended ns and ps time scales.51 VIII. Electrochemical Formation and Spectral Identification of Arene Cation Radicals and the Osmium(VI1) Anion Radical. The identification of the CT ion pair in Scheme I1 requires independent verification as the separate arene cation radical and osmium(VI1) anion radical. The anthracenes represent viable donors for electrochemical methods of electron detachment since the cation radical is persistent on the cyclic voltammetric time scale. Thus the cyclic voltammogram in Figure 9 (left) shows M solution of anthracene the initial positiue scan of a 5 X in dichloromethane containing 0.1 M tetra-n-butylammonium hexafluorophosphate (TBAH). The reversible redox couple An
An+
+e
at Eo = 1.30 V vs S C E
for anthracene in dichloromethane is indicated by the ratio of anodic and cathodic peak currents z;/iT = 1.l .52 The transient anodic spectroelectrochemistry of this anthracene solution at a platinum microgrid electrode produced the absorption spectrum of the cation radical shown in the inset of Figure 6 (left). Analogously the cyclic voltammogram in Figure 9 (right) shows the initial negative scan of a 5 X M solution of osmium tetroxide also in dichloromethane containing 0.1 M TBAH. The reversible redox couple
OsO,
+e
Os04-
at Eo = -0.06 V vs S C E
(51) Compare: Sankararaman, S.; Haney, W. A.; Kochi, J. K. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1987, 109, 5235, 7824. (52) Bard, A. J.; Faulkner, L. R. EIecfrofhemicalMethods; Wiley: New York, 1980. See also footnote 6 in ref 21 and Hammerich and Parker (Hammerich, 0.;Parker, V. D. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1974, 96,4289).
in dichloromethane is indicated by the ratio = 1.0. The = 305 nm, e spectroelectrochemistry of osmium tetroxide (A,, = 900 M-I cm-' in dichloromethane) showed an absorbance increase in the region of -300 nm, but a distinctive band for Os00 could not be discerned.53
Discussion Osmium tetroxide is a versatile electron acceptor that is capable of forming a wide range of electron donor-acceptor (EDA) complexes with alkene and arene donors (eq 1). In this study we have successfully established how the [Ar, Os04]complexes are involved as precursors in the oxidative addition of osmium tetroxide to various arenes by the three independent procedures herein designated as direct thermal (DT), promoted thermal (PT), and charge-transfer (CT) osmylation. For example, the anthracenes react rather slowly with osmium tetroxide via the EDA complex to effect DT osmylation in nonpolar solvents and afford 2:l adducts that are then converted to the more tractable pyridine derivatives such as A (see Figure 4). Alternatively, the same ternary product A is directly formed at a significantly enhanced rate by the PT osmylation of anthracene with a mixture of OsO, and pyridine (eq 8). Finally, the OsO, adduct to anthracene is instantly produced by C T osmylation involving actinic excitation of the [Ar, OsO,] precursor complex. As such, the three procedures represent different activation mechanisms for arene oxidation. Thus DT and PT osmylations are adiabatic processes in which the transition states are attained via the collapse of an arene donor with the OsO, and the base-coordinated Os04(py) electrophile, respectively. On the other hand, CT osmylation is a nonadiabatic process resulting from the vertical excitation of the [Ar, OsO,] complex. For the latter, time-resolved picosecond spectroscopy can define the relevant photophysical and photochemical events associated with the charge-transfer excitation of an arene EDA complex in eq 4, as we have previously shown with arene complexes involving other electron acceptor^.^^*^^ Accordingly let us first establish the mechanism of C T osmylation a n d then enquire as to how it can be related to either DT or PT osmylation or to both. Before (53) (a) We judge that the electronic absorption spectrum of Os04' is similar to that of Os04 [Wells, E. J.; Jordan, A. D.; Alderdice, D. S.; Ross, I. G . Austr. J . Chem. 1967,20,23151 with an absorption band at 300 nm, since by comparison the absorption spectra of the related oxoruthenium complexes RuO, and Ru0,- are quite similar, both showing distinctive bands with k- = 385 nm [Seddon, E. A,; Seddon, K. R. Chemistry of Ruthenium; Elsevier: Amsterdam, 1984, p 58.1 (b) We thank a referee for kindly pointing out a recent report of the isolation and characterization of the perosmate salt Ph&s*OsO4' by Bilger et al. (Bilger, E.; Pebler, J.; Weber, R.; Dehnicke, K. Z . Naturforsch. 1984, 398, 259).
-
Wallis and Kochi
8216 J . Am. Chem. SOC.,Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988
Scheme I Ar
+ OsO,
ArOsO,
-
+ OsO,
slow
fast
ArOs0, Ar(Os0,J2
(12) (13a)
Scheme 11'
Where the brackets denote solvent-caged pairs.
ascribed to contact charge transfer, as formulated by Orgel and M ~ l l i k e nwho , ~ ~ predicted the CT absorption bands in these EDA complexes to be associated with the electronic excitation to the ion-pair state (eq 15). As such the time-resolved spectra in Figures 6 and 7 identify the formation of arene cation radicals to occur within the rise time of the 30-ps laser pulse. [The accompanying presence of the perosmate(VI1) (Os04-)counteranion is obscured by the arene absorption^.^] We thus conclude that the electron transfer from the arene donor to the OsO, acceptor in the EDA complex in eq 15 effectively occurs with the absorption of the excitation photon (hvCT),in accord with Mulliken's theory.27 Furthermore the appearance at 425 nm for 4.25 h gave a brown precipitate, which on treatment with pyridine yielded 0.05 mmol of the 2:l adduct 1,4-Cl2Hl2.20sO,.4py. This product was shown to consist exclusively of the anti stereoisomer by 'HN M R spectroscopy in comparison with the product formed by thermal osmylation of 1,4-dimethyInaphthalene. Phenanthrene. A solution of phenanthrene (0.148 g, 0.83 mmol) and G O 4(0.25 g, 0.98 mmol) in tetrachloromethane (3.0 mL) was irradiated at wavelengths greater than 380 nm for 8.75 h. Treatment of the resulting brown precipitate with pyridine yielded 0.10 mmol of the 1:l adduct P C14Hlo~Os04~2py, as confirmed by comparison of its 'HN M R spectrum with that of an authentic sample. Other Charge-Transfer Osmylations in (3.0 mL) Hexane: 9-bromoanthracene (0.12 mmol), OsOI (0.36 mmol), X > 480 nm; 4.75 h yielded OsOl (0.029 mmol), anthraquinone (0.012 mmol); 9,10-dibromoanthracene (0.083 mmol), OsO, (0.90 mmol), X > 480 nm; 3.25 h yielded OsO2 (0.053 mmol), anthra-
+
-
Wallis and Kochi
8222 J. Am. Chem. Soc.. Vol. 110, No. 24, 1988 quinone (0.033 mmol); 9-nitroanthracene (0.13 mmol), OsO, (0.99 mmol), A > 480 nm, 18 h gave 0s02(0.019 mmol), anthraquinone (0.01 5 mmol); 9-cyanoanthracene (0.025 mmol), Os04 (0.98 mmol), X > 480 nm, 5.5 h yielded OsO2(0.004 mmol), no other products detected; 2,6-dimethoxynaphthalene (0.072 mmol), OsO, (0.60 mmol), X > 425 nm, 18.5 h gave 0 s 0 2 (0.007 mmol); 1-Methoxynnphthalene (0.28 mmol), OsO, (0.57 mmol), X > 425 nm, 12.25 h gave Os02 (0.009 mmol); 9,10-dimethylanthracene (0.32 mmol), OsO, (0.64 mmol, X > 480 nm, 12.25 h yielded a mixture of 2:1 adducts (0.008 mmol) after pyridine workup consisting of 15% syn adduct (IH N M R 6 6.03 (2 H, m), 5.56 (2 H, m)) and 85% anti adduct ('H N M R 6 6.23 (2 H, m), 5.22 (2 H , m)); 9-methylanthracene (0.32 mmol), OsO,(0.32 mmol), X > 480 nm, 12.25 h, gave a mixture of a pair of 2:l adducts after pyridine workup (0.015 mmol): 50% syn adduct (IH N M R 6 8.07 (1 H, s, H-IO), 6.17 (1 H, m), 5.73 (1 H, m), 5.59 (1 H, m)) and 50% anti adduct ('H N M R 6 7.99 (1 H, s, H-lo), 6.27 (1 H, m). 5.89 (1 H, m), 5.22 (1 H, m)). Other Charge-Transfer Osmylations in (3.0 mL) Dichloromethane: 2 , 6 dimethoxynaphthalene (0.36 mmol), OsO,(0.76 mmol), X > 415 nm, 10 h, no reaction; 1-methoxynaphthalene (0.28 mmol), OsO,(0.57 mmol), A > 425 nm, 12.25 h gave a trace amount of 0 s 0 2 (CO.001 mmol); 9,lO-dimethylanthracene(0.32 mmol), OsO,(0.64 mmol), X > 480 nm, 12.25 h, yielded a mixture of two isomers of 2:l adduct (0.010 mmol): 44% syn adduct and 56% anti adduct; 'H N M R spectra were similar to those from the photochemical reaction in hexane; 9,lO-dibr-cene (0.12 mmol), OsO, (0.36 mmol), X > 480 nm, 4.75 h, yielded traces of the 2:l adduct: 9-nitroanthracene (0.13 mmol), OsO,(0.99 mmol), X > 480 nm, 18 h, gave no reaction. Time-Resolved Spectroscopy for Charge-Transfer Osmylation. The transient intermediates formed during the photoexcitation of the EDA complexes of arenes and OsO, were examined in two time regimes. Time-resolved differential absorption spectra in the picosecond time scale were obtained by using a laser-flash system that utilized the 532-nm second harmonic 30-ps (fwhm) pulses from a Quantel YG402 modelocked Nd:YAG laser as the excitation source (- 10 mJ per pulse). The analyzing beam was produced by passing the fundamental wavelength (1064 nm) through a solution of phosphoric acid in D20, to generate a pulse of white light.89 Temporal measurements were made by varying the pathlength of the fundamental with respect to the second harmonic.g0 Spectra were measured for each time by averaging 25 individual pulses. Measurements were made at times less than and greater than the maximum absorbance for the transient, such that to could be determined as the time at which the absorbance due to the transient had reached half-maximum. Time-resolved differential absorption spectra in the ns-ps time regime were measured on a laser flash system based on the Quantel YG580-10 Q-switched Nd:YAG laser with a pulse width of 10 ns (fwhm). The 1064-nm pulse was frequency doubled and separated with a dichroic mirror to obtain 532-nm pulses of 160-170 mJ. The interrogating beam consisted of the output from a I50 W xenon lamp in a Oriel lamp housing with a Aspherab UV grade condenser lens. The emerging probe beam was focussed onto an Oriel 77250 monochromator. A Hamamatsu R928 photomultiplier tube attached to the exit slit of the monochromator served as the detector. A Kinetic Instruments sequence generator and laser controller was used in conjunction with a Tektronix 7104 oscilloscope - ClOl video camera for digitizing. The data acquisition was performed with Tektronix DCSOl software in an AT&T 6300 plus computer for processing with ASYST 2.0 software. Quantum Yield for Charge-Transfer Osmylation. Quantum yields were determined by a standard procedure, as exemplified by the C T osmylation of anthracene. A 1000 W Hg-Xe lamp was equipped with an infrared water filter, and an appropriate narrow band-pass interference filter (e.g., 520 f 5 nm). The light intensity was measured with a Reinecke salt a c t i n ~ m e t e rin~ which ~ K[Cr(NCS)4(NH,)2] (ca. 50 mg) was dissolved in distilled water (5 mL), and the solution was filtered in the dark. One 2.0" aliquot served as a blank to monitor the dark, thermal reaction. A second 2.0" aliquot was photolyzed for typically 10.0 min with constant stirring. A 1.0" aliquot of each solution was then diluted to 5.0 mL with an aqueous solution of iron(II1) nitrate (0.1 M) containing perchloric acid (0.5 M) and left to develop for 30 min. The difference in absorbance at 450 nm between the photolyzed and blank solutions was used to calculate the number of einstein emitted per second at the monitoring wavelength. To a solution of the appropriate arene (ca. 0.02 mM) in dichloromethane or hexane (3.0 mL) was added excess OsO,(ca. 5 mM). A 1.0-mL aliquot was removed and added to an aqueous solution of sodium bisulfite (ca. 1 g in 10 mL). After the (89) The emergent white light consisted of an uniform continuum in the spectral range between 450 and 780 nm. (90) For a full description of the instrumentation, see: Atherton, S. J.; Hubig, S. M.; Callan, T. J.; Duncanson, J. A.; Snowden, P. T.; Rodgers, M. A. J. J . Phys. Chem. 1987, 91, 3137.
unreacted OsO,was destroyed, the aqueous layer was extracted with the corresponding solvent. The extracts were combined to a total volume of 50.0 mL. The concentration of the arene was then determined spectrophotometrically. The remaining 2.0 mL of solution was then irradiated for a known period of time (typically 3 h), and a second 1.0-mL aliquot was removed and treated identically to the first aliquot. From the change in concentration of the aromatic hydrocarbon, the quantum yield at the monitoring wavelength was calculated. The alternative procedures utilized the decrease either in the absorbance of the charge-transfer band (Table I) or in the arene concentration (by G C analysis with an appropriate alkane as the internal standard). Formation Constants of the EDA Complexes of Arenes and Os04. In a typical experiment, a 3.0" aliquot of a standard solution of Os04 in the appropriate solvent (ca. 8 mM) was transferred to a 1-cm quartz curvette equipped with a stirrer bar. The UV-vis spectrum was measured with a sample of pure solvent as the reference. This spectrum served as a base line for the subsequent measurements. A known amount of arene was added, and the solution thoroughly mixed. The spectrum was remeasured, and the absorbances (&) at three. different wavelengths close were noted. This procedure was repeated at least seven times. to ,A, From a plot of [OS04]/Acr against [arenel-I the slope was estimated as (Kcc?)-l and the intercept as q - ~ - l . X-ray Crystallography of G O 4 Adducts to Benzene and Anthracene. The 2:l benzene adduct B of approximate dimensions 0.80 X 0.50 X 0.20 mm was mounted in a random orientation on a Nicolet R3m/V automatic diffractometer. The radiation used was Mo Ka monochromatized by a highly ordered graphite crystal. Final cell constants as well as other information pertinent to data collection and refinement were space roup, Pi (triclinic); cell constants, u = 12.299 (6) A, b = 13.318 (8) c = 14.298 (8) A, a = 92.46 (4)', @ = 114.65 (4)', y = 115.10 (4)', V = 1858 A'; molecular formula, C26H26N4080s2.CH2C12; formula weight, 987.9; formula units per cell, 2 = 2; density, p = 1.77 g cm"; absorption coefficient, p = 70.3 cm-I; radiation (Mo Ka), X = 0.71073 A; collection range, 4' < 20 < 35'; scan width, A0 = 1.7 (Ka2-Ka,)';scan speed range, 3.0-15.0' min-I; total data collected, 2308; independtnt data, I > 3 4 4 , 1747. The Laue symmetry was determined to be 1, and the space group was shown to be either P1 or Pi. Intensities were measured by using the w scan technique, with the scan rate depending on the count obtained in rapid prescans of each reflection. Two standard reflections were monitored after every 2 h or every 100 data collected, and these showed linear isotropic decay amounting to 75% over the 36-h course of the experiment. In reducing the data, Lorentz and polarization corrections were applied as well as an empirical absorption correction based on $ scans of nine reflections having x values greater than 70'. The structure was solved by use of the SHELXTL Patterson interpretation program, which revealed the positions of the two Os atoms in the asymmetric unit, which comprises one full molecule. The remaining non-hydrogen atoms were located in subsequent difference Fourier syntheses. Since there were not very many observed data, each of the pyridine rings was treated as a rigid body, modeled on the accurately refined results of a previously determined organometallic structure. Separate isotropic thermal parameters were refined for each atom. One of the rings (N2) was found to have unusually high thermal motion and was quickly found to be disordered over two sites at roughly right-angles to each other about a common pivot. When the thermal parameters involved were constrained to similar values as the other pyridines, the population factors refined to 65%:35% for the N2:N2' rings, respectively. All remaining atoms were converted to anisotropic motion, after which all hydrogens were entered in ideal calculated positions. A single isotropic temperature factor was used for all of the hydrogen atoms. At this point, an area of disordered solvent was found and determined to be composed of three separate molecules. All appear to be methylene chloride and are refined to occupancy factors of approximately 40%, 30%, and 35% for C27, C28, and C29, respectively. Due to the low populations rigid bodies were used, based on the best positioning of the C27 unit. After all shift/esd ratios were less than 0.5, convergence was reached at the agreement factors: R =~ll~ - lo~ lc l l / ~0.068; l ~ oR, l ~= [Ey(lFaI- I~c1~2/C~I~a121i'2~ 0.058; weights, w = U ( F ) - ~No . unusually high correlations were noted between any of the variables in the last cycle of full-matrix least-squares refinement, and the final difference density map showed a maximum peak of 1.4 e/A3, positioned 1.3 A from Os2. All calculations were made with Nicolet's SHELXTL PLUS (1987) series of crystallography programs. The 2:l anthracene adduct A of dimensions 0.75 X 0.35 X 0.20 mm was mounted in random orientation of the diffractometer as described above. Final cell constants as well as other information pertinent to the crystallography were as follows: space group, PI, triclinic: cell constants, u = 12.184 (4) A, b = 12.633 (4) A, c = 15.372 (6) A, a = 88.34 (3)', /3 = 89.38 (3), y = 87.55 (3); V = 2363 A3; molecular formula, C3,H30N4080s2-3.5CH2C1,;formula weight, 1300.3; formula units per cell, 2 = 2; density, p = 1.83 g c d ; absorption coefficient, p = 58.3 cm-I;
8,
+
J. A m . Chem. SOC. 1988, 110, 8223-8228 radiation (Mo Ka),X = 0.71073 A; collection range, 4 ' < 20 < 40'; scan width, A0 = 1.4 (Ka,- Kal)O;scan speed range, 3.0-15.0' mi&; total data collected, 4426; independent data, I > 340,3637. The Laue symmetry was determined to be 1,and the space group was shown to be either PI or Pi. Intensities were measured with the w scan technique as described above. In reducing the data, Lorentz and polarization corrections were applied as well as an empirical absorption correction based on $ scans of ten reflections having x values between 70 and 90'. The structure was solved by use of the SHELXTLPatterson interpretation program, which revealed the positions of the two Os atoms in the asymmetric unit, which comprise one full molecule. The remaining non-hydrogen atoms were located in subsequent difference Fourier syntheses. One of the rings (N2) was found to have unusually high thermal motion and was quickly found to be disordered over two sites at roughly 35' to each other about a nearly common pivot. When the thermal parameters involved were constrained to similar values as the other pyridines, the population factors refined to 65%:35% for the N2:N2' rings, respectively. Ideal rigid body phenyl rings with fixed isotropic temperature factors were used for the N 2 and N2' rings. All remaining atoms were converted to anisotropic motion, after which all hydrogens were entered in ideal calculated positions. A single nonvariable isotropic temperature factor was used for all of the hydrogen atoms. At this point, four areas of disordered solvent were found and determined to be composed of nine discernable orientations of methylene chloride. The C35 area had only one orientation (80% occupancy), the C36 area had three orientations (40%/30%/30%), the C37 area had two (40%/30%), and the C38 area had three (40%/30%/30%). Thus, there were a total of 3.5 molecules of solvent, statistically, for every solute molecule in the crystal. Due to the low populations rigid bodies were used, based on the geometry of an ordered molecule found in a previous structure. No attempt was made to include solvent hydrogens. After all shift/esd ratios were less than 0.2, convergence was reached at the agreement factors: R = xllFol lFcll/xlFol, 0.044;R , = [xw(lFol - IFc1)2/xwlFo12]'/2, 0.046.No unusually high correlations were noted between any of the variables in the last cycle of full-matrix least-squares refinement (except the disordered solvent molecules), and the final difference density map showed a maximum peak of about 1 e/A3, positioned within one of the solvent groups. The atomic coordinates and equivalent isotropic thermal parameters as well as the observed and calculated structure factors for B and A are included in the Supplementary Material.
+
8223
Promoted Thermal Osmylation of 9-Methylanthracene Dimer. 9mol), osmium tetroxide Methylanthracene dimer (10.5 mg, 2.73 X (28 mg, 1.1 X IO4 mol) and pyridine (2.2X lo4 mol) were dissolved in heptane (3 mL), and the solution was sealed in an ampoule in vacuo. C for a The mixture was heated to 60 OC for 18 h and then at 100 ' further 26 h in the dark. The solvent was removed under reduced pressure. The mixture was analyzed by IH NMR (CDCI,)to give 31% 9-methylanthracene, 40% unreacted dimer, and 29% of the anti-isomer of the adduct A,,,. To test for the thermal cracking, 9methylanthracene mol) and heptane (3 mL) were sealed in an dimer (10.2mg, 2.7 X ampoule in vacuo, and the solution was heated to 100 OC in the dark for 48 h. Spectrophotometric analysis of the resulting solution indicated the mol) and 9-methylanthracene presence of unreacted dimer (1.2X (3.0X mol). We conclude that 56% of the dimer was converted to the monomer. In order to test for the thermal reaction of Os04 with pyridine, osmium tetroxide (28 mg, 0.11 mmol) and pyridine (18 L, 0.22 mmol) were dissolved in heptane (3 mL), and the solution was sealed in an ampoule in vacuo. The yellow solution was heated to 100 OC in the dark for 48 h. Iodometry of the final pale yellow solution indicated that only 10.2mg of Os04 (36%) remained unreacted.
Acknowledgment. W e thank t h e National Science Foundation and the R. A. Welch Foundation for financial support, J. D. Korp for crystallographic assistance, the Center for Fast Kinetics Research (under t h e auspices of NIH G r a n t RR00886 and t h e University of Texas, Austin) for use of their picosecond laser flash photolysis equipment, and funds from the National Science Foundation to construct our ns-ps laser flash system a t Houston. Supplementary Material Available: T a b l e I1 containing formation constants of [Ar, Os04] complexes by t h e Benesi-Hildebrand method a n d Tables A-D and F-I containing X - r a y crystallographic d a t a consisting of a t o m i c coordinates and equivalent isotropic displacement parameters, bond angles a n d lengths, and anisotropic displacement parameters for the benzene a n d anthracene adducts B and A, respectively (8 pages); Tables E and J containing observed a n d calculated structure factors ( 1 9 pages). Ordering information is given on a n y current masthead page.
Primary Deuterium Kinetic Isotope Effects for the Thermal [ 1,7] Sigmatropic Rearrangement of 7-Methylocta- 1,3(2),5(Z)-triene John E. Baldwin* and V. Prakash Reddy Contribution from t h e Department of Chemistry, S y r a c u s e University, Syracuse, New York 13244. Received J u n e 2, 1988
Abstract: 7-Methylocta-l,3(Z),5(Z)-triene isomerizes to 2-methylocta-2,4(Z),6(Z)-triene over the temperature range 60-1 15 O C through a first-order process characterized kinetically by the activation parameters log AH = 9.8 and EaH= 21.5 kcal/mol. establishes the Arrhenius parameters log A D = 10.3 and EaD= Parallel kinetic work with the 7-deuterio-7-methyloctatriene 23.5 kcal/mol. Thus A D / A H= 3.2 and (EaD- EaH)= 2.0 kcal/mol, and a substantial tunneling component for the [ 1,7]sigmatropic hydrogen migration is evident.
Primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects for sigmatropic migrations of hydrogen have attracted renewed attention in t h e past few years. T h e magnitudes kH/kD and t h e possible temperature dependences of these ratios of rate constants continue t o attract interest a n d present substantial challenges to both experimentalists a n d theoreticians. While most of this attention has been devoted t o [ 1,5] hydrogen shifts,'-4 t h e magnitudes of
several [ 1,7] hydrogen migrations have been reported. T h e [ 1,7] sigmatropic isomerizations leading from 1,3(Z),S(Z)-octatriene to two isomers of 2,4,6-octatriene exhibit k H / k D values of 6.4-7.7.5 For two cis-isotachysterol analogues: [ 1,7] hydrogen shifts were found to have primary k H / k D values of 4.0 a n d 2.6 a t 98.4 O C , and two previtamin D analogues gave t h e corresponding vitamin D analogues a t 80.4 "C with k H / k D values of about 6.' A much
( I ) Jensen, F.; Houk, K. N. J . Am. Chem. Sac. 1987, 109, 3139-3140. (2)Gajewski, J. J. Zsofapes in Organic Chemisfry;B u n d , E., Lee, C. C., Eds.; Elsevier: Amsterdam, 1987;Vol 7, pp 115-176. (3)Shen, G.-Y.; Tapia, R.; Okamura, W. H. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1987,109, 7499-7506 and references therein.
(4) Dewar, M . J. S.; Healy, E. F.; Ruiz, J. M. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1988, 110, 2666-2667. ( 5 ) Baldwin, J. E.; Reddy, V. P. J . Am. Chem. SOC.1987,109,8051-8056. (6)Hoeger, C.A.;Johnson, A. D.; Okamura, W. H. J . Am. Chem. SOC. 1987, 109,4690-4698
0002-7863/88/1510-8223$01.50/0 0 1988 American Chemical Society